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End to age of naivety: Pension reforms in post-transition countries

End to age of naivety: Pension reforms in post-transition countries. CONFERENCE “SOCIAL EUROPE – PROBLEMS AND PERSPECTIVES” , University of Finance and Administration , Prague. Ji ří Rusnok, Juraj Dlhopol č ek , ING Czech and Slovak Republics 27. November, 2009 Prague. Introduction.

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End to age of naivety: Pension reforms in post-transition countries

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  1. End to age of naivety: Pension reforms in post-transition countries CONFERENCE “SOCIAL EUROPE – PROBLEMS AND PERSPECTIVES”, University of Finance and Administration, Prague Jiří Rusnok, Juraj Dlhopolček, ING Czech and Slovak Republics 27. November, 2009 Prague

  2. Introduction Our understanding of how to reform a pension systems has evolved significantly over the past 30 years. “Concepts” that initially evolved in Latin America traversed the Atlantic Ocean and found their way to new Europe. Here they were used as a generally prescribed ‘remedy’ for ailments of the newly emerged transition economies. However, present economic and political situation (partially exacerbated by the Crisis) shows that these “concepts” might have been implemented too early on in the transition process. Initial enthusiasm for dramatic changes and reforms is cooling and we are entering a period of post-transitional disillusionment – “end to age of naivety”. This presentation aims at highlighting some of the new challenges to reformed pension systems and propose topics for further research and discussion. Jiří Rusnok & Juraj Dlhopolček ING

  3. Basic principles behind pension reforms • As the number of workers relative to the number of pensioners (system dependency ratio) declines throughout the world, it is becoming more difficult to keep the prevailing Pay-As-You-Go (PAYGO) system alive • In the PAYGO system workers contribute to a pension fund that is drawn on by current retirees, with the expectation that their pensions will be paid in turn by tomorrow's workforce • There are basically only two choices and its combination: • Pensions must be cut or • Already high payroll taxes must be increased • The first is probably politically unacceptable; the second would cause further misallocation in the labor market, increase tax avoidance, and create a disincentive to work and hire ING

  4. Demographics matter Population tree in Czech Republic: 1945 vs. 2060 Males Females Males Females ING

  5. Chile: Pioneer in paradigmatic pension reform • In 1980 Chile replaced the government-financed PAYGO pension system with an new structure: a privately administered, national system of mandatory retirement savings that guarantees a minimum pension to all eligible individuals (determined by means testing) • Instead of paying a social security tax, employees deposit 10 % of their monthly wages in an individual investment account bearing their name, at any one of private pension funds. The money that accrues in the account during the employee's active career, along with the returns on the investments made by the pension funds, will be used to cover the employee's retirement benefits • As of June 2009 the 5 administrators had approx. 8 million affiliates and 4,4 million active contributors and were managing assets worth $100 billion, or 70% of Chile's GDP • The pension funds are authorized only to invest these savings; they are prohibited from engaging in any other activities. To guarantee a diversified, low-risk portfolio and prevent theft, fraud, or mismanagement, strict government regulations apply, overseen by a special government agency • The funds provide statements to contributors three times a year that disclose the last four monthly contributions paid by employers, the fund's financial performance, and the accumulated balance and rate of return on individual accounts • The government is the insurer of last resort, but individual pension savings are insulated from the budget, and cannot be used for any but their intended purpose ING

  6. World Bank endorsement of Chilean-style reform in 1994 • A turning point in the development of pension reforms movement came in 1994 with the publication of World Bank: Averting the Old Age Crisis: Policies to Protect the Old and Promote Growth • This report was the first comprehensive and global examination of old age security. • Three functions of old age financial security programs were identified –redistribution, saving, and insurance • It evaluated the policy options for meeting these functions using two criteria: • Impact on the ageing population • Its impact on the economy as a whole • The study suggests that financial security for the old and economic growth would be best served if governments relied on system consisting of three separate parts: 1. A publicly managed system with mandatory participation and the limited goal of reducing poverty among the old 2. A privately managed mandatory savings system 3. A voluntary savings system • By making advice more flexible than only advocacy of the Chilean approach and allowing room for continuation of the state social security system, the report made the global policy approach more appealing to a broader array of countries without giving up the key element of adding individual, privately managed funded accounts ING

  7. Historical perspective:Latin America Note: In this table, individual contribution rates to the private tier exclude commissions and disability and survivors’ insurance Source: Katherine Mueller: PUBLIC-PRIVATE INTERACTION IN THE STRUCTURAL PENSION REFORM IN EASTERN EUROPE AND LATIN AMERICA in INSURANCE AND PRIVATE PENSIONS COMPENDIUM FOR EMERGING ECONOMIES,Book 2,Part 2:2)c , OECD, 2001 and own update ING

  8. Historical perspective: Central and Eastern Europe Note: In Bulgaria mandatory occupational pension funds were established from 2001, covering mandatory early retirement system for workers working in hard or hazardous conditions. In Slovakia workers working in hard or hazardous conditions has to be covered mandatory by III.pillar pensions since year 2005. Source: own modification based on Mueller: The Making of Pension Reform Privatization in Latin America and Eastern Europe in: R.Holzmann, M.Orenstein and M.Rutkowski (eds.) Pension Reform in Europe: Process and progress, The World Bank (2003) and Chlon-Dominczak: Evaluation of Reform Experiences in Eastern Europe, study for FIAP and The World Bank(2005) ING

  9. Time-series perspective of pension reforms ING

  10. Need for pension reform viewed through public finance sustainability • In relation to pre-reform pension systems, most transition economies share similar ‘ailments’: • High system dependency ratios • Low retirement age • High replacement ratios in some countries • Exposure to the expected demographic shocks and as a consequence a growing financial imbalance • High contribution rates and weak link between contributions paid and pension benefits, and resulting limited incentive to compliance • Significant inter-generational and intra-generational inequalities • From a very simplified and generalized point of view, these factors can be summarized into a single category: • Sustainability of public finance with (desired) welfare and social parameters implicitly included • Sustainability of public finance related to PAYGO pension system here refers to increasing burden of gap between current/future contributions and current/future liabilities that will need to be financed (subsidized) from state budget – implicit gap • In general, governments can chose among three main paths in reforming a pension system: (i) reform of existing PAYGO, (ii) shift to a mandatory fully funded system, (iii) adopt a combination of the two (a multi-pillar system) • Opting for options (ii) and (iii) in essence eliminates (i.e. reform in Kazakhstan) or reduces scale of this implicit gap by shifting value of future costs into current costs  implicit gap shifts into explicit gap “Starting from an unsustainable PAYGO scheme, a pension reform will usually aim at curbing the growth in total government liabilities over time. Thus a pension privatization can involve a trade-off between reducing total public (implicit plus financial) debt in the long run, but increasing the riskiness of the composition of liabilities in the short and medium term as financial debt replaces IDP (implicit pension debt), at least during the transition period of the reform”. (Cuevas, Gonzales, Lombardo, Marmolejo, 2008) Source: Cuevas, Alfredo, Gonzalez, Maria, Lombardo, David, Lopez-Marmolejo, Arnoldo, 2008, “Pension Privatization and Country Risk”, IMF Working Paper, 08/195 (Washington: International Monetary Fund), pp. 4 ING

  11. Transition costs • Introducing a funded componentcreates a fiscal hole in the PAYG system. The transition to a funded system entails coststhat somehowneed to be paid. There are several ways in which these costs can be covered: • Taxes can be raised on the current generations, either directly on payroll by“adding on” the individual account contributions without reducing contributionsto the PAYG component, or by increasing other unrelated taxes • Current expenditures on pensions or on other programs can be reduced • Debt can be issued, to be paid back in the future either by tax increases orexpenditure cuts • Efficiency gains of some kind can be sought, for instance through reductions inpayroll tax rates that remove labor-market distortions • Each method has its pluses and minuses. Tax increases or expenditure cuts can mostdirectly lead to positive future gains from pension reform but are likely to be politicallyunpopular. Issuing debt can postpone the costs of pension reform but also will postponemany of its benefits • Issuing debt can also create unintendedproblems—explicit debt generally carries a much higher interest rate than the implicitrate of debt carried by PAYG promises (market interest rates vs. the rate of growth of thewage fund). Merely swapping implicit debt for explicit debt therefore often will worsenthe fiscal stance of government by increasing interest rates it must pay on its debt. Efficiency gains always are desirable since they give benefit withoutbeing at the expense of anyone; however they can be hard to achieve ING

  12. Financing and sustainability • As discussed on a previous slide, governments have several sources for financing this newly formed explicit gap: • Privatization • PAYGO parameters • Increase of budget deficit • GDP growth (growth of output) • Sizes of these explicit gaps and forms of their financing occurred in different size in different countries • Main factors of the variability were following: • Undertaken reform path (scope of reform) – single fully funded pillar vs. multi-pillar • Robustness of assumptions in models • Accuracy of actuarial assumptions • Willingness to follow-through by subsequent governments (i.e. 13th pension, early retirement, selective non-standard high pensions, policies that promote evasion from paying taxes and social contributions) • Reliability of assumed financing sources Political and economic approaches toward financing of the explicit gap are closely intertwined with sustainability of the overall reform – improper mixture coupled with political choices can lead to introduction of new uncertainties and materialization of risks which can destabilize one or more elements (or even stakeholders) essential to proper functioning of the reformed pension system! ING

  13. Private pension administrators as new stakeholders • Process of implementing a fully funded pension pillar (single or multi-pillar) breaks down stakeholders into three main categories: • Citizens – those impacted by pension system reform (parameters of PAYG) and future savers • Government – guarantor and “privatizer” of public finance • Pension administrators – new profit oriented stakeholders • It is imperative to realize that investing into creation of pension administrator has to make business sense: • This is a private-ownership element that has been embedded into public framework • Simply put  opportunity cost of required capital has to be lower or at least equal to that attained elsewhere within financial service industry • Failure to understand this fact by other stakeholders can seriously hamper long-term sustainability of such reform ING

  14. Pension administrators and risk vs. uncertainty • Impact of political and economic choices on pension administrators and hence sustainability of pension reform can be described through concept of “Risk and Uncertainty” • Being one of the key elements for a successful reform, pension administrators too face risks and uncertainties: • Risks are quantified and projected into business cases of pension administrators and determine final required rate of return of the business • Uncertainties do not find their way into quantitative parts of business cases “It is important to distinguish risk and uncertainty. With risk, the probability distribution of potential outcomes is known or estimable, with uncertainty it is not. The distinction is critical, among other reasons, because actuarial insurance can generally cope with risk but not with uncertainty. Pension schemes face both uncertainty and risk – the future is an uncertain business, and no pension scheme can give certainty ”. (Barr, 2000) Incorrectly priced business case can force a pension administrator out of the market, however, irresponsible or short-sighted policy choices by a government can convert too many uncertainties into risks and force all private players out! Source: Barr, Nicholas, 2000, “Reforming Pensions: Myths, Truths, and Policy Choices”, IMF Working Paper, 00/139 (Washington: International Monetary Fund), pp. 5 ING

  15. Case study of Slovakia: Some uncertainties “materialized” into risks Summary of legislative changes (realized and expected) that carry significant implications to local 2nd pillar pension administrators: ING

  16. Case study of Slovakia: Potential implications • Slovak legislation on fund performance with a guarantee element in practice requires a pension administrator to subsidize negative fund performance from own assets – this has several implications: • Amount of assets held by pension funds is so high, that even small negative performance would cause a significant damage to business feasibility of the pension administrator • In order to avoid this new risk, pension administrators invest into very similar conservative financial instruments • Potential gain for savers is limited (even in growth funds) • Composition of funds and their performance is very similar, hence savers have very little choice • In fact, (depending on market conditions) asset appreciation in pension funds will most likely drop below rate at which PAYGO is indexed (Slovakia uses Swiss indexation of a basket of inflation and average wage growth) • As consumer understanding of pension system in general is quite low, these implications can form yet another basis for the government to question the validity of a fully funded pillar in Slovakia • Scenario of reversal from multi-pillar to Defined Contribution is very rare (Argentina is a recent example), and has not been studied by academia in much depth. Although full reversal could be the most radical outcome of current challenges to pension systems in transition countries (and post-transition), case study of Slovakia certainly provides an example of it could materialize into reality • Academic community has to shed more light into topic of a reversal to help governments and other institutions better understand implications of their policy choices ING

  17. Challenges ahead: External environment is getting worse • Chronic public finance tensions getting further deepened by current financial/economic crises (see chart below) • Hostile attitude of current EU public-finance policy – Stability and Growth Pact punishes countries that have converted part of its implicit pension debt into explicit fiscal burden – by including this into overall budget deficit. In other words: the transition costs of the partial shift to funded pensions are not accepted as an investment in favour of long-term sustainability of public finance. • Ideological shift from neo-liberal approach to more significant role of states in economy Source: EC, 2009 ING

  18. Conclusion – End to „age of naivety“ • Since early 90´s paradigmatic pension reforms were accomplished in more than 20 middle-developed countries across LA and CEE • Private financial sector took an active part in most of these cases in role of provider of specific know-how, supplying products and services, making significant investments into the financial services infrastructure and marketing • Pension reforms were in essence implemented as a specific type of Public Private partnership project (PPP), although with significant differences when compared to classical PPP (i.e. infrastructure) – political risks and uncertainties were not insured by explicit legal contracts • Today, 10 to 15 years on (at least in CEE) – pension providers and investors are experiencing huge frustration with newly materialized politically driven uncertainties and risks. In very real terms, these threaten sustainability of pension providers and pension reforms as a whole (Slovakia, Poland, Romania,...?) • It seems to be more and more clear that at the time many of the emerging economies were not sufficiently prepared for such kind of pension reforms – it means kind of institutional development including quality of state administration and political culture • Implications of today’s policy choices on the future are key challenges for the academic community and for new research in this area ING

  19. Thank you for your attention Contact: juraj.dlhopolcek@ing.sk jiri.rusnok@ing.cz

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